CBUS Soul®️ Sculpture Trail 2025-2026

Expiration: Jun 18th 2026

As an extension of the CBUS Soul®️ cultural platform, this trail explores sculptures throughout Columbus from African American artists Melvin Edwards, Andrew F. Scott, Omar Shaheed, Bill Agnew, Barbara Chavous, Larry Winston Collins and LaVerne Brown. Details of each sculpture are available both via audio clips and text descriptions. The 12 sculptures along the trail will each count as one point towards the $10 Black Kahawa Coffee Gift Certificate and the CBUS Soul®-themed tote bag. Get ready to explore the rich history and local contributions of African American artists!


Included Venues

See locations on an interactive map.

Adinkra Fence

The “Adinkra Fence” is one of two  artist Andrew F. Scott's contributions to the Kwanzaa Playground. According to Scott's artist site: "The Kwanzaa playground was developed in 1995 as a joint effort between the community and the City of Columbus. Seven local artists and sculptors contributed to the design and construction. The park is designed in the shape of a human which represents a first ancestor. 

The park focuses on positive African-American images based on the concept that, "it takes a whole village to raise a child." 

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Gavel

“Gavel” by Andrew F. Scott is a 31 foot steel gavel and sound block located in the south reflecting pool outside the Supreme Court of Ohio. The sculpture is constructed entirely from stainless steel and it is the largest gavel in the world. “Gavel” was commissioned in 2008 by the Ohio State Bar Association for the price of $200,000. Scott's massive rendition of the symbolic tool of the judge is charged with notions about the omnipotence of the judiciary . Early renderings of the artwork appear to include the phrase “NO JUSTICE NO PEACE” inscribed along the base of the sound block. The rallying cry was first documented in 1986 at the protest against the murder of Michael Griffith, a 23 year old Trinidadian man who was run over after a white mob attacked him and his friends. The phrase is still commonly used at protests against racial injustice to this day and could have been placed on the sound block to function as a reminder to those in power of their responsibility to rule justly. Although the phrase is absent from the finished piece, the overwhelming gavel made by an African American man continues to serve as a symbolic reminder to the Ohio Supreme Court to uphold justice for all and protect society’s most vulnerable.” 

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Man with Guitar

“Man with Guitar” is a sculpture created by artist Ommar Shaheed, installed on December 2, 2022. This sculpture is made of bronze and was originally carved from limestone before being scaled up to its current dimensions. The original limestone version was part of Shaheed's Jazz series, which was showcased at the American Jazz Museum in Kansas City years prior. 

Visit “Man with Guitar” outside of the Adelphi bank. 

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Bust of George Washington Williams

In 1879, George Washington Williams was the first African American elected into state government in Ohio. African-American sculptor Ed Dwight created the bronze bust of Ohio State Representative Williams in 2001. This sculpture is located in the George Washington Williams Memorial room in the Ohio Statehouse. 

The George Washington Williams Memorial Room honors Ohio's first African-American legislator. In addition to images of Mr. Williams, the 1880s style room features photographs of other African-Americans who followed Williams, serving in government. 

Visit “Bust of George Washington Williams” at the Ohio Statehouse.  

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African Portal
"Queen Brooks was one among seven original artists, Bill Agnew, Barbara Chavous, Andrew Scott, Larry Winston Collins, Pheoris West, and LaVerne Brown, who contributed to the Kwanzaa Playground which was developed in 1995 as a joint effort between the community and the City of Columbus. It is designed in the shape of a human figure, which represents the first ancestor and it focuses on positive African American images. Brooks work symbolizes peace and tries to bring a sense of welcoming and calm to all visitors. Brooks's current ""African Portal"" is constructed out of steel to ensure its longevity as a beautiful architectural piece for decades to come. Queen Brooks is a Columbus native. Her gallery and place of residence, Blue Haven Art Studio is where she does most of her creative work. She is the recipient of the Ohioana Career Award the highest recognition bestowed on an artist in the state of Ohio. She works with a diverse range of media from wood burning, drawing, painting, print making, mixed media, and digital photography. Her work is often colorful, patterned and textural and she focuses on subject matter surrounding her culture, human issues and spirituality. Her artwork has been shown nationally and internationally and is held in the collections of the Ohio Dominican and Ohio Otterbein Universities, the King Arts Complex, and the Columbus Museum of Art."
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Akua'ba Invocation Figure
"“Akua'ba Invocation Figure” is one of eight Invocation Figures by Andrew F. Scott. The Akua’ba fertility figure has historically been used by the Akan women of West Africa to aid in conception. Traditionally, akua’ba figures are carved from wood and consecrated by priests although Scott’s comparatively massive sculpture is constructed entirely out of steel. The figures are all carved in a similar style with characteristics of ideal Akan beauty such as a flat disklike head and rings around the neck to replicate rolls of fat which are signs of beauty, health, and prosperity. Akan women carry these figures against their backs wrapped in their skirts, in the same way they will carry their infant children. After aiding the woman through pregnancy, akua’ba are returned to shrines as offerings to the spirits in return for the safekeeping of the child. Some families choose to keep their akua’ba as a memorial to the child and the figures become family heirlooms that call specific loved ones to mind. The disk-headed akua’ba figures remain one of the most recognizable forms in African art. Andrew F. Scott is a multimedia artist and sculptor whose work falls at the intersection of digital fabrication technologies, traditional fine arts practices, and collective cultural ideals. He finds inspiration from African American art and culture and views his work through the spirit of “Sankofa,” a word in the Twi language of Ghana that literally translates to ""go back and get it."" Metaphorically, “Sankofa” expresses the importance of reaching back to knowledge gained in the past and bringing it into the present in order to make positive progress. “Through synthesis, manipulation, and abstraction, [Scott] reinterpret[s] these traditional forms and ideas and bring[s] them into a modern context.” Scott’s work has been exhibited nationally and internationally. Visit “Akua’ba Invocation Figure” in front of the King Arts Complex."
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Baobab Tree

 

The “Baobab Tree ” is one of two artist Andrew F. Scott's contributions to the Kwanzaa Playground. According to artist Scott's site: "The Kwanzaa playground was developed in 1995 as a joint effort between the community and the City of Columbus. Seven local artists and sculptors contributed to the design and construction. The park is designed in the shape of a human which represents a first ancestor. The park focuses on positive African-American images based on the concept that, "it takes a whole village to raise a child." 

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Helping Hands
"“Helping Hands” by Omar Shaheed depicts a family gathering together outside of the Grant Medical Center in Columbus, Ohio. The figures are faceless, however they look toward one another and engage in a loving embrace. One figure holds a newborn in its arms, while three other figures hold each other. “Helping Hands” was given to the medical center by Dr. Craig W and Deborah Anderson and their family as a gift representing the importance of family. The dedication plaque reads, “This limestone work is dedicated to the families of the Grant Medical Center - the caring staff, the patients, and those who support them.” This sculpture is a visualization of Black family, love, comfort, care, and the community itself. Omar Shaheed is a Columbus native who works primarily in stone and bronze. Shaheed’s abstract sculptures often reflect the life of African Americans with themes such as family, love, musical influence and the “ghetto.” Shaheed has expressed that he began his career as an artist by using his work as a means to leave behind his early struggles with poverty and today his large scale work can be seen internationally across the US, in Negril, Jamaica, and in the west African nation of Burkina Faso. Each piece vibrates with pride, comfort and awareness to the Black experience and expands upon the themes of love and community. Visit “Helping Hands” outside of the Grant Medical Center in Columbus, Ohio. Dimensions: 9ft x 4ft x 4 ft"
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Jazz Duets
"“Jazz Duets” by African American sculptor Omar Shaheed depicts a male saxophone player back-to-back with a singing woman. “Jazz Duets” pays homage to the great influence of jazz music and its importance to Black culture as well as referencing the Jazz Era in Columbus. Though many associate the Jazz Era with its origins in New Orleans or major cities where it flourished such as New York and Chicago, Ohio was also influential in the development of Jazz music. Many artists would stop through Ohio on their way to play in other parts of the country. Jazz musicians such as trumpeter Harry “Sweets” Edison, instrumentalist Roland T. “Rahsaan Roland” Kirk and bandleader and singer Ted Lewis all have ties to the Jazz scene in Ohio. Tenor and alto saxophonist Royal G. “Rusty” Bryant and keyboardist Hank Marr were celebrated specifically in Columbus because of their regional connection having grown up in the area. Jazz music was based on Southern African American musical practice of singing away one's sorrows but was soon co-opted by white musicians and white audiences. While this sometimes allowed for social mobility of African American musicians, the popularity of these performers within predominantly white spaces brought about many racial conflicts. Despite these challenges, Jazz lives on as a celebration of African American pride and culture. Artist Omar Shaheed is a Columbus native who works primarily in stone and bronze. As he explains, “When you carve different stones, it generates a rhythm — music. It’s like you’re dancing with the stone, and you and the stone become one,” bringing even more life to his piece, “Jazz Duets.” Shaheed’s abstract sculptures often reflect the life of African Americans with themes such as family, love, musical influence and the “ghetto.” Shaheed has expressed that he began his career as an artist by using his work as a means to leave behind his early struggles with poverty and today his large scale work can be seen internationally across the US, in Negril, Jamaica, and in the west African nation of Burkina Faso. Each piece vibrates with pride, comfort and awareness to the Black experience and expands upon the themes of love and community. Feel the music and visit “Jazz Duets” across Long Street from the Lincoln Theatre. "
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Nkondi Invocation Figure
"“Nkondi Invocation Figure” is one of eight Invocation Figures by Andrew F. Scott. The nkisi nkondi is a figure made by the Kongo people of Africa. A nkisi nkondi can be used as an oath taking image that is brought in to resolve disputes, heal the sick, avenge wrongdoing, or act as a guardian if evil sorcery has been committed. The nkondi is a protective force that will use violence to hunt and punish their offenders. Nkondi figures are recognizable by the many sharp objects inserted into their skin. Traditionally, a blade is driven into the figure to ask for help. Impaling the figure is thought to activate the nkisi and enrage it into performing its duty to protect. Scott’s “Nkondi Invocation Figure” is pierced with a series of nails. Nkondi figures are also known to have reflective surfaces attached to their bellies. The reflection represents the ‘other world’ of the dead. In this culture, the dead live on as spirits who can look through the reflection into the living world and keep an eye on potential enemies. Scott’s figure holds a reflective box near its abdominal region. In addition to representing the “other world,” the reflective material also acts as a storage unit for medical substances. Andrew F. Scott is a multimedia artist and sculptor whose work falls at the intersection of digital fabrication technologies, traditional fine arts practices, and collective cultural ideals. He finds much of his inspiration from African American art and culture and views his work through the spirit of “Sankofa., “Sankofa” is a word in the Twi language of Ghana that literally translates to ""go back and get it."" Metaphorically, “Sankofa” expresses the importance of reaching back to knowledge gained in the past and bringing it into the present in order to make positive progress. “Through synthesis, manipulation, and abstraction, [Scott] reinterpret[s] these traditional forms and ideas and bring[s] them into a modern context.” Scott’s work has been exhibited nationally and internationally. Visit “Nkondi Invocation Figure” in front of the King Arts Complex."
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Out Of The Struggles Of The Past To A Brilliant Future
“Out of the Struggles of the Past to a Brilliant Future” by Melvin Edwards features a large abstract metal structure composed in an arch formation including flat pieces of metal and oversized stylized chain links. The piece was Edward’s first large major public art commission, though he is best known for his ongoing series of small-scale reliefs, “Lynch Fragments.” He began the series in the 1960’s as a way to express his concerns about racial violence and the civil rights movement. The series continued as a response to the Vietnam War and has since developed to be a more personal exploration of Edwards’ identity and past. “Lynch Fragments” features amalgamations of brutal tools used for torture, often featuring chains which are strongly associated with captivity and oppression of African American people. “Out of the Struggles of the Past to a Brilliant Future” also features imagery of chains, yet it holds hope for a brighter future. Its title seems to echo the sentiment from the song “Lift Every Voice and Sing” which was adopted by the NAACP as its official song and often called the Black National Anthem. The second verse of the song reads as follows. “We have come over a way that with tears has been watered, We have come, treading our path through the blood of the slaughtered, Out from the gloomy past, ‘Til now we stand at last Where the white gleam of our bright star is cast.” Like many other works in his practice, “Out of the Struggles of the Past to a Brilliant Future” reflects Edward’s “engagement with the history of race, labor, and violence, as well as with themes of the African Diaspora.” Most of Edward’s work is in metal. His background as a metal worker is significant to the stories he tells through his work, with chains being a common motif, and his own ancestry. Edward’s great-great-great grandfather had been a blacksmith in Africa when he was abducted and brought to the United States to work as an enslaved person making metal things on a plantation near Tuskegee. As Edwards states, “you go into your profession because it’s an extension of your family, or you go into it because you’re called to do it, as it turned out, it was both for me.” Melvin Edwards (b.1937) is highly respected as a pioneer in the history of contemporary African-American art and sculpture. His work has been shown nationally and internationally at a variety of major galleries and museums including his 1970 solo exhibition at the Whitney Museum of American Art, which was the first solo exhibition at the Whitney to feature an African American sculptor. Visit “Out of the Struggles of the Past to a Brilliant Future” in Mount Vernon Plaza off Atcheson Street.
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The Family
"Omar Shaheed’s “'The Family” is a limestone sculpture featuring an African American family engaged in a loving and protective embrace. This sculpture shows Shaheed’s continued appreciation of the black body as a faceless mother, father, sister and brother turn to each other holding hands and forming an abstracted rectangular shape together. Shaheed explained that this sculpture refers to the black family in the ghettos as the ""cornerstone of our community."" The symbolization of a black family shows the power of love in this community. Omar Shaheed is a Columbus native who works primarily in stone and bronze. Shaheed’s abstract sculptures often reflect the life of African Americans with themes such as family, love, musical influence and the “ghetto.” Shaheed has expressed that he began his career as an artist by using his work as a means to leave behind his early struggles with poverty and today his large scale work can be seen internationally across the US, in Negril, Jamaica, and in the west African nation of Burkina Faso. Each piece vibrates with pride, comfort and awareness to the Black experience and expands upon the themes of love and community. Visit “The Family” outside of the King Arts Complex in Columbus, Ohio. Quotes from a 2019 interview of Artist Omar Shaheed by Curator, Destyni Green."
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